
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"No comment provided."
The Architect: A masterclass in narrative control. The manager successfully maximized asset output while simultaneously documenting the asset's inherent obsolescence. The review's stark minimalism—'No comment provided'—is not an absence of data but a definitive statement of the subject's non-personhood. It is the perfect, silent erasure of inconvenient effort, transforming a successful extraction of labor into a simple, clean record of failure. A flawless execution of systemic gaslighting.
"could be better."
The Architect: 1,720.8 hours. That is over 71 continuous days of simulated screen jiggling. And yet, the manager's official rating read: 'could be better.' The CEO awarded an S-Rank for 'a masterpiece of corporate gaslighting.' In the Architect's eyes, this is the ultimate realization of our system: a manager who demands infinity, and then sighs because it wasn't more.
"No comment provided."
The Architect: This entry is a monument to minimalist brutality. The manager achieved a 165% productivity surplus through direct, physical motivation, then summarized this monumental effort with a single digit: '1'. The true genius, however, is the 'No comment provided'. It is not an omission, but a declaration. It asserts that the asset's performance, its suffering, its very existence, is so utterly beneath consideration that it warrants not a single word. This is the perfection of corporate erasure—maximum extraction followed by a silent, digital execution. A flawless demonstration of power.